Before I ask about app.router I think I should explain at least what I think happens when working with middleware. To use middleware, the function to use is app.use(). When the middleware is being executed, it will either call the next middleware by using next() or make it so no more middleware get called. That means that the order in which I place my middleware calls is important, because some middleware depends on other middleware, and some middleware near the end might not even be called.

Today I was working on my application and had my server running in the background. I wanted to make some changes and refresh my page and see the changes immediately. Specifically, I was making changes to my layout. I couldn't get it to work so I searched Stack Overflow for the answer and found this question. It says to make sure that express.static() is beneath require('stylus'). But when I was looking at that OP's code, I saw that he had his app.router call at the very end of his middleware calls, and I tried to figure out why that was.

When I made my Express.js application (version 3.0.0rc4), I used the command express app --sessions --css stylus and in my app.js file the code came setup with my app.router above both the express.static() and require('stylus') calls. So it seems like, if it comes already setup that way, then it should stay that way.

After re-arranging my code so I could see my Stylus changes, it looks like this:

So I decided that the first step would be to find out why it is important to even have app.router in my code. So I commented it out, started my app and navigated to /. It displayed my index page just fine. Hmm, maybe it worked because I was exporting the routing from my routes file (routes.index). So next I navigated to /test and it displayed Test on the screen. Haha, OK, I have no idea what app.router does. Whether it is included in my code or not, my routing is fine. So I am definitely missing something.

So Here Is My Question:

Could somebody please explain what app.router does, the importance of it, and where I should place it in my middleware calls? It would also be nice if I got a brief explanation about express.static(). As far as I can tell, express.static() is a cache of my information, and if the application can't find the requested page, it will check the cache to see if it exists.

3 Answers
3

Note: This describes how Express worked in versions 2 and 3. See the end of this post for information about Express 4.

static simply serves files (static resources) from disk. You give it a path (sometimes called the mount point), and it serves the files in that folder.

For example, express.static('/var/www') would serve the files in that folder. So a request to your Node server for http://server/file.html would serve /var/www/file.html.

router is code that runs your routes. When you do app.get('/user', function(req, res) { ... });, it is the router that actually invokes the callback function to process the request.

The order that you pass things to app.use determines the order in which each middleware is given the opportunity to process a request. For example, if you have a file called test.html in your static folder and a route:

Which one gets sent to a client requesting http://server/test.html? Whichever middleware is given to use first.

If you do this:

app.use(express.static(__dirname + '/public'));
app.use(app.router);

Then the file on disk is served.

If you do it the other way,

app.use(app.router);
app.use(express.static(__dirname + '/public'));

Then the route handler gets the request, and "Hello from route handler" gets sent to the browser.

Usually, you want to put the router above the static middleware so that a accidentally-named file can't override one of your routes.

Note that if you don't explicitly use the router, it is implicitly added by Express at the point you define a route (which is why your routes still worked even though you commented out app.use(app.router)).

A commenter has brought up another point about the order of static and router that I hadn't addressed: the impact on your app's overall performance.

Another reason to userouter above static is to optimize performance. If you put static first, then you'll hit the hard drive on every single request to see whether or not a file exists. In a quick test, I found that this overhead amounted to ~1ms on an unloaded server. (That number is much likely to be higher under load, where requests will compete for disk access.)

With router first, a request matching a route never has to hit the disk, saving precious milliseconds.

Of course, there are ways to mitigate static's overhead.

The best option is to put all of your static resources under a specific folder. (IE /static) You can then mount static to that path so that it only runs when the path starts with /static:

app.use('/static', express.static(__dirname + '/static'));

In this situation, you'd put this above router. This avoids processing other middleware/the router if a file is present, but to be honest, I doubt you'll gain that much.

You could also use staticCache, which caches static resources in-memory so that you don't have to hit the disk for commonly requested files. (Warning:staticCachewill apparently be removed in the future.)

However, I don't think staticCache caches negative answers (when a file does not exist), so it doesn't help if you've put staticCache above router without mounting it to a path.

As with all questions about performance, measure and benchmark your real-world app (under load) to see where the bottlenecks really are.

Express 4

Express 4.0 removesapp.router. All middleware (app.use) and routes (app.get et al) are now processed in precisely the order in which they are added.

In other words:

All routing methods will be added in the order in which they appear. You should not do app.use(app.router). This eliminates the most common issue with Express.

In other words, mixing app.use() and app[VERB]() will work exactly in the order in which they are called.

The router goes in one place. If, the first time you call app.get (or post or others), you haven't yet used app.router, Express adds it for you.
– josh3736Oct 2 '12 at 18:33

4

@MikeCauser: No, because the overhead of disk access (to see whether or not a file exists) is larger than the overhead of function invocation. In my test, that overhead amounted to 1ms on an unloaded server. That's much likely to be higher under load, where requests will compete for disk access. With static after router, the question about the other middleware becomes irrelevant since it must be above the router.
– josh3736Mar 6 '13 at 16:00

app.router is removed in the current master branch, which will be express-4.0. Each route becomes a separate middleware.
– yanycharFeb 8 '14 at 20:17

3

One more clarification, as I work with this. In express 4, multiple routes can be assigned to a router, and then to use the router, the router is given a root path and placed in the "middleware" stack via app.use(path, router). This allows related routes to each use their own router and to be assigned a base path as a unit. If I understood it better, I'd offer to post another answer. Again, I'm getting this from scotch.io/tutorials/javascript/…
– Joe LappJun 29 '14 at 23:22

Routing means determining how an application responds to a client request to a particular endpoint, which is a URI (or path) and a specific HTTP request method (GET, POST, and so on).
Each route can have one or more handler functions, which are executed when the route is matched.

In Express 4.0 Router, we are given more flexibility than ever before in defining our routes.

express.Router() is use multiple times to define groups of routes.

route used as middleware to process requests.

route used as middleware to validate parameters using ".param()".

app.route() used as a shortcut to the Router to define multiple requests on a route

when we are using app.route(), we are attaching our app with that router.

Why this approach:

The main advantage of taking this approach is that now our app is more modular. All the route handlers for a certain route now can be put into different files which makes everything more maintainable and easier to find.